San Antonio Express-News

Age, health problems will chart Trump’s bout with COVID-19

- By Lenny Bernstein, Laurie McGinley, Joel Achenbach and Lena H. Sun

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s advanced age and his immune system’s response will most strongly influence the course of his battle with COVID-19, a disease whose impact ranges unpredicta­bly from no symptomsat all torapiddea­th, according to experts and research.

The president’s path over the next10days— or possiblylo­nger, if he develops an extended version of the disease— alsomaybed­ictated by whether he inhaled a large amount of virus deep into his lungs.

Trump, famously opposed to the medical guidance that Americans wear masks in most circumstan­ces, may have left himself vulnerable with that behavior to receiving a heavy dose of the coronaviru­s. COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, has killed at least 207,000peoplea­ndinfected more than 7.2 million in the United States, according to a Washington Post analysis.

“Theoddsare far andawaytha­t he’ll have a mild illness” as most people with the virus do, said Dr. Gregory Poland, an infectious disease specialist at the Mayo Clinic who has no role in Trump’s care.

People with underlying health problemsal­so tendtohave­poorer outcomes. The 74-year-old president weighs 244 pounds, a total that makes him slightly obese at 6 feet 3 inches tall, according to informatio­n released by the White House after Trump’s physical exam in June. He takes a statin for high cholestero­l and his blood pressure is somewhat elevated.

“This is a reminder that COVID-19 is an ongoing threat to our country and can happen to anyone,” said Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control andPrevent­ionduring theObama administra­tion. “Learning more aboutwhen President Trumpand others with whomhe had contact last testednega­tiveandfir­st tested positive will help understand this outbreak and limit the risk of further spread.”

As of now, the most important factor is the president’s age. Human immune systems, which battle the virus, becomeless effective as we grow older. Even as the overall COVID-19 death rate in the United States has declined during the eight months of the pandemic, nearly 80 percent of fatalities occuramong­people65 andolder. Older men die more frequently than older women.

Someone in Trump’s age group faces five times the risk of hospitaliz­ation asdoes an18- to29-yearold and an even greater risk of death, said GrahamSnyd­er, medical director of infection prevention and hospital epidemiolo­gy at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The likelihood of Trump developing symptoms, and the severity of those symptoms, also increases with age.

“Age is very clearly the strongest predictor of not doing well with the virus,” Snyder said. “The likelihood of him developing symptoms, including death, is most strongly predicated on his age.”

According to the CDC’s best estimates, 5.4 percent of people 70 years or older who contract COVID-19die. Forpeople between20 and 49, it is just two-hundredths of 1 percent.

Frieden said Friday on Twitter that a 74-year-old “has approximat­ely 3 percent chance of death (and a) 10-15 percent chance of severe illness.”

It is not clear whether Trump has other underlying health problems.

Now that the virus has taken hold, doctors will closely monitor the response of Trump’s immune system. Many people who suffer the worst outcomes experience a “cytokine storm,” an overreacti­on of the body’s immune system that canravaged­elicateblo­od vessels and lead to fluid buildup and pneumonia. Many of those patients require ventilator­s, typically in a medically induced coma, that essentiall­y breathe for them.

The first five to seven days after

Trump was infected — a date that may be difficult to determine — are critical. That is when he could develop the pneumonias, blood clots and bacterial infections that have made COVID-19 so deadly, though some complicati­ons also can come later.

The severity of Trump’s illness also may depend, in part, on how he contracted the virus. Many researcher­s believe the virus is airborne — that it can float distances on tiny exhaled particles smaller than respirator­y droplets, which are heavy enough to drop out of the air.

That could lead to infection deep in the lungs and a more severe outcome, said ColumbiaUn­iversity epidemiolo­gist Jeffrey Shaman. Wearing a mask can help prevent that, research has shown.

The amount of virus transmitte­d to a patient — the viral load — is another important factor in disease progressio­n, said Albert Ko, an infectious-disease epidemiolo­gist at the Yale School of Public Health.

“For many infectious diseases, the higher your infecting inoculum dose is, the more risk you have of getting infected, the more risk you have of getting a disease and severe complicati­ons and dying,” Ko said.

“That’s something that’s hard to predict. It’s not like we’re measuring the number of viruses that someone was exposed to at the time they were infected.”

‘Odds are far and away that he’ll have a mild illness’ as most people do, doctor says

 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? Donald Trump holds up his face mask during the first presidenti­al debate at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio. The president and first lady Melania Trump have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press Donald Trump holds up his face mask during the first presidenti­al debate at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio. The president and first lady Melania Trump have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

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